7 Legit Reasons Why So Many Kids are Bored by Church
Last Sunday, our church did its annual multilingual service, with three congregationsāMandarin-speaking, Spanish-speaking, and English-speakingāall coming together for worship. We had readings in multiple languages, and a sermon was given in Spanish with an English translator. There was no Sunday school this week, so kids joined their parents in adult church.
When we informed our kids Sunday morning of what would be happening, there was a collective and passionate, āNOOOOOOOOOOOO!ā (Honestly, I should have typedĀ moreĀ oās to reflect the true level of protest.)
āPLEASE, let us stay home! We can do home church! Please, not THAT service! Itās SO BORING!ā
Apparently, they remembered it well from the prior year. We dragged them into the car in spite of the whining and endured their pleas all the way there.
Iād be lying if I said this was a rare occurrence of my kids not wanting to go to church. The nature of this service perhaps made them complain more loudly than normal, but there are plenty of typical Sundays when our kids ask, āDo weĀ haveĀ to go?ā Iād bet a lot of money that youāve been asked the same.
The question of what to do when kids donāt want to go to church has been one of the most frequent ones Iāve received over the years from readers, and itās one of the most commonly discussed questions in various Christian parenting forums (you can join my own Christian parenting group on FacebookĀ by clicking here).
The running theme of kidsā complaints is usually that church isĀ boring,Ā and they donāt want to go because of it. Parents tend to assume itās their job to convince their kids that churchĀ isnātĀ boring and are looking for ways to do so.
But thatās a really bad assumption.
I think there are actually quite a fewĀ legitimateĀ reasons why so many kids are bored by the church and/or Sunday school. In other words, kids arenāt always just making up random excuses to not go; a lot of times, their avoidance reflects aĀ genuine problem.
Here are several ālegitā reasons for boredom at church that parents should consider.
- Thereās too much emphasis on fun at Sunday school.
This probably sounds counterintuitive. After all, if Sunday school is a lot of fun, then kids shouldĀ wantĀ to go, right? No, no, and no. Now, if Sunday school truly was some kind of incredible amusement park-like experience, that could be the case (and kids would choose to go for the wrong reasons). But Sunday school āfunā usually consists of relatively mild amusement like crafts, foosbal, or maybe an indoor relay race using spoons and M&Ms.
This kind of āfunā can never compete with your childās idea of fun at home, where they can do anything they want.
Of course,Ā they will want to stay home; church fun is boring compared to home fun. When a Sunday school program focuses on entertainment, this is the natural apples-to-apples comparison a kidās going to make. Who can blame them?
If most of what your kid takes away from church is that thereās a little lesson with a lot of social time, youāre going to have a hard time convincing them that āchurchā isnāt boring (when āchurchā is Sunday school entertainment in their mind).
- āAdultā church is beyond their current grasp.
Parents sometimes try to get around the lack of substance found in many Sunday school programs by keeping their kids with them in āadultā church each week. This can work really well for some kids. My 11-year-old daughter has recently been opting out of Sunday school to come with us to adult church because sheās able to follow along and says she learns much more than in class. When my 9-year-old daughter saw that her sister was doing this, she wanted to come too. But when she did, she spent most of the service with her head on my shoulder trying to sleepāshe just doesnāt have the interest or attention span yet that my older daughter does. When she told me after church that day that it was boring, I told her, āOf course it was! You chose to sleep!ā
For kids like my older daughter, whoĀ wantĀ to attend adult church in lieu of Sunday school, this can be a great choice. But for those like my younger one who arenāt ready to track with whatās being taught and instead spend the time doodling in a bulletin or daydreaming, boredom will be the inevitable outcome. That doesnāt necessarily mean that kidsā Sunday school will be seen asĀ lessĀ boring, but rather that adult church isnāt always the answer.
- Their family attends church sporadically.
Every pastor I know laments the fact that families are attending church with less regularity than they used to, for all kinds of reasons (Sunday morning sports being a big one). A āregularā attender is now someone attending once per month.
I know this is going to rub some people the wrong way, but itās important to say: A church could have the best Sunday school program in the world, but if a family only attends sporadically, itās natural that a child will find it boringātheyāre not really connected to whatās going on or whatās being taught. You canāt blame a kid for mentally checking out at that point.
- Faith in their family is mostly about going to church on Sundays.
Even if your family attends church every week, if youāre not regularly praying together, studying the Bible together, and having conversations about faith at home, your kids will rightly wonder why they should bother going to church. Church will come to be seen as just one more thing they have to do each week, without any meaningful connection to their daily lives. In other words, it will become an unnecessary time burden in their minds because itās irrelevant for the rest of the week.
- They regularly engage in deep faith conversations at home.
Hereās another counterintuitive point, but Iāve seen it happen in a lot of families that are very committed to their faith. If your family consistently has deep faith conversations (the kinds I write about in my books,Ā Keeping Your Kids on Godās SideĀ andĀ Talking with Your Kids about God), in all likelihood your kids are gaining a far more intellectually robust faith than theyāll get from the average Sunday schoolāand Sunday school will seem extremely boring in comparison. A telltale sign that this is the problem is when your kids complain they arenāt ālearning anythingā or say that itās the āsame stories over and over.ā
Though parents often assume thereās some kind of problem with their kidsā spiritual development when they donāt want to attend Sunday school, it can mean the opposite in this case; kids may simply have much higher expectations for whatĀ shouldĀ be discussed in a Sunday school environment and be bored by the 600thĀ telling of Noahās ark followed by popcorn.
- They have doubts about God or the truth of Christianity.
It should be obvious, but Iām surprised how many parents never consider this possibility: If kids have stopped believing in God or in the truth of Christianity,Ā theyāre going to find church boring.
Imagine for a moment thatĀ youĀ had to attend a church (or other group) you didnāt agree with every single week, and someone expectedĀ youĀ to take interest. They study a book you think is fiction but apply it as truth in their lives and think you should too. Chances are, youād find that boring because you donāt believe what they do. Why study a fictional book so deeply each week?
In the same way, kids who no longer hold a faith in Jesus are going to get tired of hearing about Him every Sunday. Itās outside the scope of this post to weigh the pros and cons of making such kids attend church, but there are two points for our current purpose to take away here:
- If your kids find church boring and/or fight you on going, have a conversation with them about what they currently believe regarding God, Jesus, and the Bible. You may be surprised by what you learn.
- If you discover that their boredom with the church is rooted in unbelief, your greater concern (by far) should be to discuss their doubts and to haveĀ conversations about the evidence for the truth of Christianity.
- Theyāre human.
On the drive to the church service I described at the beginning of this post, I turned to the kids in the back of the car and said, āHey guys. I have something surprising to tell you.ā They got quiet, and I continued.
āI donāt feel like going to church today either. I donāt really enjoy this particular service. I would rather be at home this morning.ā
They looked at me with wide eyes, anticipating we might go home.
āBut Iām going anyway. You see, as humans, itās often easiest and very tempting to stay home from church on Sunday mornings. Thatās aĀ totally normalĀ feeling, and adults have it too sometimes. But we make it a priority to go in spite of those occasional feelings for several reasons: 1) Itās one way of putting God first in our lives (by committing to church each Sunday morning); 2) Church isnāt only about learningāitās also about worship, and worship transforms our relationship with God; and 3) Itās important to develop relationships with other believers and be in community (Hebrews 10:25). Iām not going to church this morning because I canāt think of anything else Iād like to be doing, but rather because I love the Lord, and this is one way I put him first.ā
In other words, I explained to them why their boredom shouldnāt be the deciding factor in attending church.
IĀ didnātĀ try to convince them that they shouldnāt ever think the church is boring.
This is a critical distinction for kids to understand because as Iāve hopefully shown in this post, there are manyĀ legitimateĀ reasons why kids may find church boring at times. When they understand why church matters evenĀ whenĀ they find it boring, it can lead to far more productive conversations than just ramming heads every Sunday morning.
Stay tuned for next weekās blog post, when Iāll do a cover reveal with the table of contents for my new book coming in March! Iām so excited to share it with you!Ā Also, Iām running a giveaway of four of my books on my blogās Facebook page through December 5. If you donāt follow me there already or havenāt seen it,Ā click over!
Recommended resources related to the topic:
Talking with Your Kids about God: 30 Conversations Every Christian Parent Must Have by Natasha Crain (Book)
Keeping Your Kids on God’s Side: 40 Conversations to Help Them Build a Lasting Faith by Natasha Crain (Book)
Courageous Parenting by Jack and Deb Graham (Book)
Proverbs: Making Your Paths Straight Complete 9-part Series by Frank Turek DVD and Download
Forensic Faith for Kids by J. Warner Wallace and Susie Wallace (Book)
God’s Crime Scene for Kids by J. Warner Wallace and Susie Wallace (Book)
Natasha Crain is a blogger, author, and national speaker who is passionate about equipping Christian parents to raise their kids with an understanding of how to make a case for and defend their faith in an increasingly secular world. She is the author of two apologetics books for parents: Talking with Your Kids about God (2017) and Keeping Your Kids on Godās Side (2016). Natasha has an MBA in marketing and statistics from UCLA and a certificate in Christian apologetics from Biola University. A former marketing executive and adjunct professor, she lives in Southern California with her husband and three children.
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